CityView Magazine

January/February 2019

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/1068047

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 26 of 67

Discover CityViewNC.com's fresh updated look! | 25 FIRE, WATER & STORM DAMAGE REPAIR Recognized as one of the top Restoration Contractors in the U.S. Serving Southeastern North Carolina with offices in Wilmington, Fayetteville and Raleigh. 24/7 Emergency Service Insurance Claims Specialists Full Service Restoration and Renovation Locally Owned and Operated Since 1981 910.485.6738 www.highland-inc.com Visit our Cabinet and Flooring Showroom located at 1409 Clinton Road in Fayetteville. 910.988.0097 5239 Yadkin Road Fayetteville, NC 28303 www.therockguns.com THE ROCK Guns & Accessories • Custom Builds • Buy/Sell/Trade • Laser Engraving • In-House Gunsmith and more! To be legal to take, the amount of THC in any extract has to be 0.3 percent or less. at's the concentration in hemp, from which CBD is usually extracted. In marijuana, the THC concentration is a much higher range – from 15 to 40 percent. Because of the low concentration of THC, CBD doesn't cause the same high that marijuana does. e Harvard blog post cited a World Health Organization report that says humans who use CBD show no effects of abuse or dependence potential, adding there are no public health related problems with the use of pure CBD. People can go online right now and buy CBD in all 50 states, where laws are in place that make it legal with differing levels of restriction. It was three years ago in December that the Food and Drug Administration eased regulations on CBD, permitting research trials. e key issue for the government, according to the Harvard blog post, is whether the CBD being used is extracted from hemp or marijuana, with hemp being the preferred source for the extract. So why all the interest in CBD? Again, according to the Harvard article, it's been used by people dealing with an assortment of ailments, from certain types of epilepsy-related seizures to people dealing with insomnia and chronic pain. Dr. Sanjay B. Shah, who operates the Premier Pain Practice in Fayetteville, cannot and does not prescribe the use of CBD to his patients, but he knows many of them are using it because they talk about the experience.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of CityView Magazine - January/February 2019